Abstract

Apoptosis-related genes and proteins and proliferation activity and their relationship with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a contemporary issue. In this study, prognostic or pathogenetic roles of EBV latent infection, proliferating activity, and apoptosis-regulating proteins in pediatric Hodgkin lymphomas were explored. EBV-EBER, lmp-1, ki-67, bcl-2, survivin, Bax, fas, c-myc, and p53, and apoptotic index were analyzed in 63 pediatric Hodgkin lymphoma cases. The results were evaluated by chi-square, Mann Whitney U test, Pearson correlation analysis, and Kaplan Meier survival analysis. Thirty-two cases were stage I or II, whereas 31 cases were stage III or IV. The mean age was 8.4 +/- 63.54 years. EBV was positive in 52 (82.5%) cases. Overall survival was 94% and event-free survival 83.6%. Bax expression was observed 74.6%, bcl-2 47.6%, survivin 43%, p53 33.3%, fas 54%, and c-myc 25.4%. The mean apoptotic index was 18.22%. The mean proliferation index was 57.83%. The proliferation index was positively related with EBV but not with prognosis. None of the parameters were related with prognosis. EBV was negatively related with the apoptotic index. There were no relationships between bax, bcl-2, survivin, p53, fas, and c-myc with EBV. These results suggest that EBV might play a role in Hodgkin lymphoma pathogenesis by inducing proliferative activity and inhibiting apoptosis. Apoptosis-related proteins were not correlated with EBV. None of the parameters was found to predict prognosis.

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